• Dekthro
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    3671 year ago

    Just use Firefox. Skip all this bullshit.

    • @spacecadet@lemm.ee
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      1991 year ago

      I use Firefox because I want you use a web browser whose main focus is browsing the web.

      • @JulyTheMonth@lemmy.ml
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        111 year ago

        I really really want to believe in firefox but the corporations behind it are way too fishy.

        The whole setup of mozilla foundation and mozilla coporation stinks. Mozilla asking for donations when the donation amount is barely 1 percent of their income.

        • my_hat_stinks
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          891 year ago

          That’s an odd complaint. If they didn’t ask for donations, donations would be a lower % of their income. How many donations do you need before you can ask for donations?

          • @JulyTheMonth@lemmy.ml
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            71 year ago

            If a corporations earns halve a billion. Does it really need donations?

            The whole concept of a parent company owning the foundation is fishy. Its just as strange that firefox seems to be like by privacy people when the owners are as instranparent as mozilla.

            • kirklennon
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              101 year ago

              The whole concept of a parent company owning the foundation is fishy.

              The non-profit foundation is the parent company. It has some taxable subsidiaries that, among other things, handle certain revenue-generating business deals.

              • @JulyTheMonth@lemmy.ml
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                11 year ago

                You say that like it is any better.

                A non-profit that owns a for-profit company is very well not realy non-profit. Just because all their profit is made by one of their subsidaries? And yet mozilla stand itself on some kind of moral highground.

                • kirklennon
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                  61 year ago

                  A non-profit that owns a for-profit company is very well not realy non-profit.

                  All of the profit of the subsidiary goes to the nonprofit parent, in furtherance of its nonprofit mission. The subsidiary doesn’t exist to make anybody rich but just to earn (taxable) income for the parent.

          • @cley_faye@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            It’s not a matter of how many donation do you need, it’s a matter of why are you asking for donations in the first place. When half the donations barely cover the salary of the head honcho through shifting restricted cash between organizations, you have to have some confidence to prominently display “We exist to advance the interests of people who use the internet — not profit for shareholders.” on your summary.

            • @BURN@lemmy.world
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              41 year ago

              So dont donate?

              Mozilla used to be much smaller and did rely on some form of donations to continue development. That may not be the case today, but the option is still there for those who’d like to

        • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
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          651 year ago

          I really really want to believe in firefox but the corporations behind it are way too fishy.

          You’re right. Let’s continue using browsers made by Google or Microsoft instead. No fishiness there at all!

      • @cley_faye@lemmy.world
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        101 year ago

        Great, because it comes bundled with an extension to show you news article you may be interested in, occasional ads for their other paid services and will regularly nudge you into donating money so that it can be used for many purpose beside improving the browser.

        • @spacecadet@lemm.ee
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          151 year ago

          This is interesting, maybe I changed a settingn years ago but when I start fire fix it just takes me to an empty window until I type something in. Doesn’t try to sell me anything

        • @BURN@lemmy.world
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          81 year ago

          This is my biggest gripe about Firefox. It keeps trying to recommend “Search with Amazon” instead of google search and a bunch of small little ads baked into the home landing page.

          • @cley_faye@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Seeing that neither Edge nor Chrome does either of those outside of regular browser operations, which also happens with Firefox, I’m not sure how that’s relevant.

    • @tiita@lemmy.world
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      251 year ago

      I came to say just this…

      Why is the person downloading chrome in the first place. Firefox with ghostery and ublock origin is the way forward

    • @JasSmith@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Sadly Firefox on iPhone doesn’t translate [human languages]. I don’t want to use Chrome on iPhone and Firefox on PC because synchronising bookmarks and history is too important to give up.

        • @JasSmith@sh.itjust.works
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          71 year ago

          Blame Apple for that bullshit.

          This one isn’t on Apple. There’s nothing stopping Firefox from having translate on iPhone. It’s on Chrome and Edge.

            • @JasSmith@sh.itjust.works
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              41 year ago

              It’s available as an add-on for Firefox on PC. Language translation is built into the application for Chrome and Edge on iPhone.

              • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
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                121 year ago

                Yes, that’s what I’m trying to say. The browsers have different methods for providing same functionality. But due to restrictions on one platform, Firefox can’t provide the functionality that the users want.

                Also no-addons policy means no adblock either. Which is quite an L.

                • @JasSmith@sh.itjust.works
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                  51 year ago

                  But due to restrictions on one platform, Firefox can’t provide the functionality that the users want.

                  With all due respect, I don’t think you understand. There is no restriction on language translation on iPhone. Firefox merely doesn’t support built-in language translation. It might have been easier for them if Apple permitted add-ons on iPhone, but it definitely does not prevent language translation. Chrome and Edge have built language translation into their apps for iPhone to facilitate this. Firefox could do the same, but have chosen not to.

      • @Steeve@lemmy.ca
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        81 year ago

        I don’t own an iPhone, but this seems like a totally fair criticism and I don’t see any replies refuting it, so what’s with all the downvotes? I swear to god this place is ridiculous sometimes, these people won’t be happy until you jump through every hoop imaginable to use the Lemmy approved software. Only positive feedback allowed!

        • @sir_reginald@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          because this is inherently Apple’s fault and not Mozilla’s.

          Apple’s the one forcing every browser on iOS to be a reskinned version of Safari. And it’s perfectly understandable that Mozilla doesn’t want to waste time and resources developing features for a Firefox-branded Safari when they could be working on their own browser.

          • @Steeve@lemmy.ca
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            21 year ago

            What’s your point? The dude gave a perfectly valid reason to not using Firefox, regardless of who’s fault it is.

            But also, how on earth would building a functional browser for a phone that owns 55% of the US market share be a waste of time and resources?

            • @sir_reginald@lemmy.world
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              81 year ago

              it’s a perfectly valid reason for not using Firefox, my point is that they’re on the wrong platform. It’s the user’s own fault, because they chose a closed platform like iOS. Developing free software for iOS is a waste of time, since everything is under Apple’s tyrannical rule and they get to decide which web engine you use, they can disallow extensions and make it very hard (and against their ToS) to sideload apps.

              I don’t like Mozilla at all, and that’s why I use Firefox derivatives and not Firefox itself, but I’m glad they don’t waste time developing for a re-skinned Safari. Those resources are best used in their own web engine.

              • @Steeve@lemmy.ca
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                11 year ago

                these people won’t be happy until you jump through every hoop imaginable to use the Lemmy approved software

                and hardware apparently lol

  • Towelieyee
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    1541 year ago

    Friendly reminder that winget comes preinstalled on Windows 11 now.
    winget install Mozilla.Firefox
    You can install Firefox without even opening Edge!

      • 520
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        371 year ago

        Not exactly “stole”; the author was fine about the code being used in this way. What they were upset about is the lack of attribution and communication.

          • 520
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            121 year ago

            The license was Apache 2.0, and there was a tiny bit of attribution…just enough to cover the license requirements.

    • @xx3rawr@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      On Windows 10 too. I always just download from the website or store but I recently experienced the pretty fun of updating my apps over CLI for some reason

      • @sir_reginald@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        great solution. instead of Chrome or MS-Chrome, you install V-Chrome. Such a big difference! It really is a completely new theme for Chrome, isn’t it? Oh and they have a built-in adblocker which is far less capable than uBlock Origin but it is built-in! isn’t that great?

        • @WereCat@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          It’s not just skin. If it was just like any other Chromium based browser I wouldn’t bother but there isn’t any browser that has great features like Vivaldi which makes working with multiple tabs a breeze. And they don’t collect any telemetry either. Not even crash logs.

          Plus, you can say pretty much that every browser with built-in adblock is worse than uBlock Origin… That’s not the point…

    • @Acters@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      Which is something you will need to do to not accept their privacy invasive terms and conditions that you have to accept before using the bloated data harvesting browser.

  • @un_owen@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Dude, nothing is more suspicious than when a developer of a supposedly free app nags you to use their app. Why do they even want you to use Edge so badly? You’re never going to pay any money for it, this screams “give us your data, we want to sell it”.

      • @justJanne@startrek.website
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        151 year ago

        The neat part about the fediverse is that no matter how badly behaved a dev may be, there’ll be enough people to fix their behaviour and work around it. Look at mastodon, gorgon made a few questionable choices but glitch and all the other forks work around it and enough community servers exist that you could block mastodon.social and never miss a thing.

        Just like with Lemmy there’s already kbin and countless other alternatives that all integrate with each other and enough community servers.

        But with browsers that’s stopped being a thing a long time ago as the modern web is far too complex for small groups of indie devs to make their own browsers.

    • @XeroxCool@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      I can’t instantly jump to nefarious purposes. I mean I’m sure there’s nefarious purposes baked into it, but it’s reasonable that a marketing group knows the common reasons people leave their product. I’m guessing these listed options will actually trigger a popup/page that explains how to correct these exact things, like a FAQ. I’m not trying to be apologetic for MS, it’s just that the choice between edge and chrome is how you balance your data… Emissions? Both suck for that reason

      • @un_owen@lemmy.world
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        81 year ago

        It might be reasonable, but the question still stands: why does Microsoft put so much effort into trying to convince people to use Edge? The purpose of Edge is to have a preinstalled browser so that you can start working right away and don’t need to rely on 3rd party software to do basic tasks. Great, I get that. Every OS has their own preinstalled browser. But what I don’t get is, why do they actively try to stop you from using a different browser? Why do they put in so much effort to stop you from installing Chrome? Why do they not put in the same effort when you try to install Notepad++ or Paint.Net? What’s so special about a browser, compared to other standard software? I can think of anti-consumer reasons, like harvesting and selling your data. And yes, Chrome isn’t any better in that regard, but at least you make the choice yourself.

        • @joenforcer@midwest.social
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          1 year ago

          The answer is very simply advertising and affiliate revenue. If you use Chrome instead of Edge, Google gets the money from their ad engine, and Microsoft gets nothing unless you actively use Bing.

          Microsoft Rewards gets you used to using Bing, which can then serve you ads on your searches instead of Google, earning money for Microsoft while giving you tiny fractions of a cent in points as a gamification strategy.

          Edge has shopping features that work just like Rakuten or Capital One Shopping, where if you “earn” cash back, Microsoft gets a cut of the sale.

          Honestly, it doesn’t bother me much. Edge has some pretty great features added in and it actually actively saves me some money and cuts me in where Google wouldn’t. Plus, it somehow is less of a memory hog and feels snappier than Chrome.

          It’s a great browser and is a huge upgrade from Chrome from a performance perspective if you don’t value their extra features and just turn them off. Not sure how Google took Chromium and made it run like shit wit Chrome when I feel like there isn’t much extra underneath the hood.

  • @PotjiePig@lemmy.world
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    921 year ago

    I don’t use Edge BECAUSE they keep begging and throwing ads at me for it. It’s off putting, desperate and exactly what I don’t want.

    I don’t use it because the Edge splash screen is chokka ads and news stories I don’t want.

    I don’t use Edge because I find Bing annoying, and prefer duck duck go and google in that order, and I’m sick of constantly being nagged to use shit I don’t want.

    Microsoft get it in your head, you are an operating system. Your job is to Operate MY system. Do that well. And by all means build more software, make it optional and installable by choice. If it’s good and works for me and not for you I will use it.

    I don’t use Chrome either. It no longer works for me. It now works for Google first.

    Ive recently downgraded Firefox from browser number 1 to number 2. Sometimes it’s good, sometimes it’s not the best.

    Currently I’m enjoying Opera because it feels fresh and zippy and works for me , but I’m not loyal. Edge if you do good, maybe I will use you too. But stop your pathetic shit.

    • @mellejwz@lemmy.world
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      241 year ago

      I used Edge since the beginning, until they decided to fill it with bloat. It’s getting worse than Chrome. Now I’m using Firefox that is still a browser instead of an application trying to replace all applications.

      • @PotjiePig@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        Late reply, sorry just going though my messages here. But I get all the Linux love, however I assume you’re a developer or a writer. Linux is incredibly niche and basically a non option for a vast load of industries.

        Im a professional video editor and animator. Adobe is my bread and butter. I can’t use another option realistically either as it mostly doesn’t exist or I have to send out my projects to other creators and need to be able to talk to other PCs.

        Linux doesn’t support Adobe, it doesn’t support about 80% of my other creative softwares, it won’t play nice. Windows, for my use case runs like a dream.

        Until Linux gets broader adoption of actual pro level applications for the film industry (and many others), it will always be a niche OS for coders and web devs sadly. I’d sooner roll back to windows XP than use Linux.

    • @Adanisi@lemmy.zip
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      121 year ago

      This is basically all proprietary software 🙃.

      It serves the company first and foremost. The user’s needs are an afterthought.

    • @gnuplusmatt@startrek.website
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      61 year ago

      Microsoft is a cloud provider these days, Windows doesn’t make enough money, that’s why they are desperate to monetise already paying customers.

      Azure/entra or whatever the fuck they call it this week is where the real money comes from

    • @kill_dash_nine@lemm.ee
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      11 year ago

      I share the same sentiment. The push of having Bing crap all over the place with the inability to make the browser more vanilla is just a turn off for me. As a former and technically current Chrome user, I have found the overall user interface to be pleasant and easy to use. At work, Chrome is the preferred browser so I continue to use it there but for personal use, I moved to Firefox. It’s definitely taken an adjustment to get used to a few small differences but I haven’t hit anything that breaks my experience to need to go back to Chrome yet after a few months on Firefox. The ability to customize Firefox to the level of detail that’s possible is pretty impressive. While I don’t go crazy with customizations because I feel it potentially adds to future tech debt I don’t want to deal with as things change in Firefox, I like having the option.

  • ɐɥO
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    691 year ago

    switching to Linux + Firefox was the best thing ive ever did

    • SirStumps
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      121 year ago

      I wish I could but I couldn’t get steam games to work on it.

      • Maestro
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        301 year ago

        Anything that’s steam deck certified should run flawlessly on Linux

      • @cjf@feddit.uk
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        131 year ago

        What was you doing?

        Other than enabling proton for all games in the settings, you shouldn’t have to do anything else to get steam games working.

        Well, unless the game itself uses anti-cheat and the developer hasn’t enabled support for Linux, anyway.

      • @Damdy@lemmy.world
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        81 year ago

        Been running only Linux for 3 years and the only time I couldn’t get a game to work was trying to play some 15 year old RTS games cross platform with friends.

        • SirStumps
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          11 year ago

          Based on the massive about of replys I feel like it was user error which would be highly likely. I will give it another try.

      • ɐɥO
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        51 year ago

        havent touched windows in like 2 years and only once had a problem with games not running

        • @Damage@slrpnk.net
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          51 year ago

          I’ve just converted my last Windows PC, meaning my gaming desktop, to Linux, now I need to figure out how to run SOLIDWORKS on it … thinking a VM with GPU passthrough, but I’m a bit scared of the endeavor, despite having been a regular Linux user for I guess almost two decades.

            • @Damage@slrpnk.net
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              21 year ago

              Eh good luck with that. SOLIDWORKS sits firmly at the GARBAGE rating on the Wine AppDB

              • @Mio@feddit.nu
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                11 year ago

                SOLIDWORKS sounds like it works perfectly, or it is not living up to its name and you should get a refund.

                Use RDP apps to the cloud or something.

              • prole
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                11 year ago

                Perhaps I have misunderstood, but I thought there were some cases where you could use it for applications that aren’t games.

                But there’s a good possibility that I’m wrong.

          • @Galaxy@lemm.ee
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            11 year ago

            I am using a 20gbps ssd with windows to go on it for my windows install so that when I plug in the ssd I boot to windows and when I restart and unplug I boot to linux, might be a solution for you?

            • @Damage@slrpnk.net
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              41 year ago

              I have kept windows on a separate ssd, but I find dual booting very disruptive, I don’t want to reboot to change between tasks, I’ve tried it already in the past and it sucks.

              • @OrgunDonor@lemmy.world
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                41 year ago

                This is why I am unfortunately back on windows. I use a couple programs everyday, and unfortunately they do not run on Linux. And there is not a usable alternative either.

                I was rebooting to windows, doing what I had to, and then rebooting again. But it is just so disruptive and not user friendly.

                • @BURN@lemmy.world
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                  31 year ago

                  This ^

                  I’ve tried dual booting multiple times over the last few years, but always end up with windows as the primary because restarting my computer 6+ times a day got so disruptive. Until the windows only software moves I’m going to be on Windows.

                • SirStumps
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                  11 year ago

                  Have you tried creating a windows VM inside of Linux?

            • SirStumps
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              11 year ago

              I haven’t tried side loading windows to be fair. I was trying to move away completely from the windows environment.

      • prole
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        51 year ago

        Which games, and how long ago did you try? Proton has come a long way in the last few years.

        • SirStumps
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          11 year ago

          I tried for about 5 hrs on Pop OS. Should I be using something else?

      • @hedgehog@ttrpg.network
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        21 year ago

        Are the games that you play reported to work in Linux? Check out ProtonDB and search for some games you care about. It’s possible they don’t work but based off user reports, most likely they’ll work okay out of the box and work well with some tinkering.

  • @UnculturedSwine@lemmy.world
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    611 year ago

    Not seeing the option “Because fuck Microsoft”

    In all seriousness tho, I use Firefox because it’s not reskinned Chrome.

  • @Treczoks@lemm.ee
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    531 year ago

    “Microsoft Edge runs on the same technology as Chrome, with the added trust of Microsoft”

    Wow. If there ever was a reason to run, this is it.

    • @shrugal@lemm.ee
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      81 year ago

      Imo asking why you leave is fine, many programs and extensions do it. The problem is that you never chose Edge but still have to use it to download another browser!

      • aeternum
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        61 year ago

        remember in the 90s or 00s when Microsoft had that antitrust case, and when you loaded up IE, it asked you what browser you wanted? We need that again, along with the antitrust case.

  • @0xb@lemmy.world
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    411 year ago

    The tragedy of edge is that it is technically a fantastic browser for windows but made by Microsoft.

    Just thinking about the engineers that built such great memory management and security features that no other browser has just to have the marketing guy come in and say ‘yeah put these three layers of bloat on top oh and don’t forget to add the new backdoor we need…’ only to see that all their work is basically a tech meme…

    I guess they must get home and cry while hugging their stock options and 300k/y contract the poor guys…

    • meseek #2982
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      41 year ago

      The first sentence is the most fantastical example of circular reasoning I’ve ever seen!

      Windows users really do all live in denial.

  • That Dutch guy
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    401 year ago

    They are BASICALLY the same, only difference is whom they send your data to.

    • @Kethal@lemmy.world
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      81 year ago

      I’m not trying to defend Google here, but I use Edge every day for work, and it’s definitely not as good as Chrome or Firefox. Both Chrome and Edge are based on Chromium, so core functionality is the same, but Edge has no shortage of crappy annoying changes that make it frustrating to use.

      • @Acters@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        preach brother, firefox always looking for ways to improve and offer you a chance to take control to do it your way.

  • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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    371 year ago

    I’m actually alright with this, which seems to be an unpopular opinion. It seems totally sensible for them to ask why you don’t want to use Edge and would rather use Chrome.

    If we want to prevent monopolies, we need healthy competition. If Microsoft improves Edge based on this user feedback to create an actually good product, then we all win. It means that if Firefox starts to pull the shit that Google is doing, we have a solid alternative.

    Of course the manner in which Microsoft does this matters a lot, but the actual concept itself is a good one.

    • @Acters@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’m actually alright with this, which seems to be an unpopular opinion. It seems totally sensible for them to ask why you don’t want to use Edge and would rather use Chrome.

      I wish for Microsoft to mind their business when I download another browser. A web developer or someone excersizing their freedom of choice should not need to deal with petty and sorry looking surveys.

      On the other hand, it is fine to ask how the browser experience is like but not this.

      If we want to prevent monopolies, we need healthy competition. If Microsoft improves Edge based on this user feedback to create an actually good product, then we all win. It means that if Firefox starts to pull the shit that Google is doing, we have a solid alternative.

      Unfortunately, this privacy invasive feature goes against this concept because it already made the browser worse. Also, Edge is chromium based. Mozilla, Apple’s Safari, and Chromium are the only true browser choices. Edge may bring some UX features, but they are data harvesting focused and not the core browser mechanisms. Microsoft is taking the work Google, and the chromium community puts into the code base and then running their own data harvesting UX on top. It is not a “alternative” browser choice, ever.

      With Microsoft’s track record, this survey is not to improve the browser but to harvest more data to pinpoint your identity and behavior to sell to advertisers and data analysts. So the “manner” Microsoft does this is more of a reason for not wanting to have this.

      • @assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Yeah that’s fair. If they just open a tab that says they’re sorry to see you go but would appreciate feedback, that’d be fine. Trying to block the download to say that, not cool at all

    • @CylustheVirus@lemm.ee
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      151 year ago

      I think it’s a conflict of interest to leverage their position as an OS provider to do this. If they want feedback they can pay a market research firm like a normal company. God knows they have the money.

      • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        Its the browser that pops it up. Go download Firefox on Chrome and the same thing happens.

    • @jivemasta@reddthat.com
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      101 year ago

      My problem with all of it is, they’ve built that shit into the browser. That means baked into the browser, it is watching what I’m doing and doing things on its own based on what I do.

      It leaves the door open for them to bother me/phone home anytime I do something that isn’t in their interests. Are they going to add in similar things for me looking for windows, office, GitHub, or Xbox alternatives?

    • @Zacryon@feddit.de
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      81 year ago

      I feel like a lot of users won’t use edge because of spite. It’s intrusive and manipulative stuff like this which has angered a lot of people. Admittedly, this is one of the more harmless reactions.

      Edge: "Nobody likes me. :( "

      Microsoft: "Don’t worry. We will make them like you. >:] "

    • @BURN@lemmy.world
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      71 year ago

      It’s none of Microsoft’s business if I’m using their web browser or not. They shouldn’t be blocking my use of another product just because I don’t like theirs.

        • @Hagdos@lemmy.world
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          81 year ago

          They are throwing unnecessary blockades (the article mentions 4 popups/warnings that Edge is just as good as Chrome).

          • @Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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            11 year ago

            I just went and downloaded chrome from Edge. Nothing got in my way. There was a notification in the corner suggesting I use edge, and then a banner at the top of the page after I downloaded it, but literally nothing got in my way.

            Sure, it’s mildly annoying, but nothing got in my way or prevented me from getting Chrome.

            And downloading firefox gave zero notifications or banners, it was just normal. Same with Safari.

            I really don’t see what is preventing me from using other browsers here.

    • @frippa@lemmy.ml
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      51 year ago

      The competition between Chrome and Edge is very shallow, they’re two slightly altered and heavily branded reskins of chromium, the real competition would be Firefox and it’s forks (mullvad, waterfox, librewolf) (and maybe webkit aka safari) Vs chromium but there’s no big corporation behind those (except safari, but it has many of the problems that big corpo chromium browsers have) , so they’re struggling a lot.

    • @sndmn@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Microsoft is synonymous with “healthy competition!” /s

      Edge collects your “ctrl-f” in-page searches. Fuck that with a cactus.

      • @SCB@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        I assure you that no percent of the people this poll is aimed at make decisions because of that. They don’t even know about it.